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Monthly Archives: February 2009
General Aviation is Not the Enemy Part II
February 24, 2009 I wanted to let you all know of a very disturbing TSA Security Directive (SD) that is being implemented under the radar that affects ALL U.S. airports with commercial Part 121 scheduled airline service. This is reality … Continue reading
Posted in General Information
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General Aviation is Not the Enemy
Below is the link to an excellent letter addressing the drubbing that our industry has taken over the last few months. Congress seems bent on crushing general aviation through misquotes and misunderstandings printed in the media. We need to let the … Continue reading
Posted in General Information
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What kind of impact will these new laws have on GA if implemented?
We want to hear from you. Please leave a comment or email your response to theradar@acmp.com
Posted in On Final
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Sea Rey and Flight Star, Available as LSA Homebuilts
Sea Rey and Flight Star, Available as LSA Homebuilts The Flightstar series, designed by Tom Peghiny, features a tractor engine and rugged construction. By Norm Goyer I have known the owners and designers of these two aircraft for many years. … Continue reading
Posted in Bird of the Week
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Callair A-2 An Ag-Plane Built for Two
In the mid 1970s, our sales team had the reputation of being able to sell anything. Or so it seemed to those who entrusted weird and wonderful aircraft to our sales line. Just after Memorial Day I received a call from a good customer who told he wanted us to sell the Callair A-2 he had taken in payment for a debt, and to get what we could for it. H’mm, alarms and lights started flashing in my overloaded brain. Continue reading
Posted in Bird of the Week
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No Solo Campo and His Lark Commander
No Solo Campo and His Lark Commander Most of the available Darters have 150-hp Lycoming engines, and swept-forward, Mooney-style vertical stabilizers. By: Norm Goyer Frank Campo was a delightful septuagenarian and a retired piano tuner. Frank was a recent widower … Continue reading
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A Gooney Bird that Flies and Floats
During WWII, the Douglas DC-3 was indispensable; it was used in every theatre of the war including every action in Europe, Africa and the South Pacific. It was a workhorse, and it was dependable. Our “Under the Radar” this week, mentioned the Japanese Zero and the Grumman Wildcat being converted to floatplanes to assist newly-arrived troops on islands without an airstrip, but miles of ocean beaches and lagoons. Continue reading
Posted in Bird of the Week
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The Morrisey Shinn Varga Kachina
I learned to fly in a tandem-seated Cub, and my small fleet of surplus military trainers were all tandem seated. In my opinion there is no better flying or fighting platform than one seated right on the center line of the aircraft. Then the pilots started taking their wives and girlfriends with them, and the complaining began, “I don’t like to sit by myself with no one to talk to,” and so on and so forth. Continue reading
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Piper Arrows, 180-hp, 200-hp and Turbo 200-hp
I have had a ongoing love of the Piper Arrow series. It wasn’t the fastest, it wasn’t the sexiest and it surely wasn’t in the same company as the Mooney, Bonanza or Centurion, but those Pipers sure worked for me. In the late 1960s, I lived in Northampton, Massachusetts, and had a motion picture contract with a motorcycle firm in Schenectady, New York. My transportation was a Piper PA-28R-180, in other words, a retractable 180-hp Arrow, one of the first models produced. Continue reading
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The Airships Akron, Macon and the Curtiss Sparrow Hawk
The most famous airship of all time was the ill-fated Hindenburg, which caught fire on landing at Lakehurst, NJ; this film clip is still one of the most highly viewed video/motion picture news clips ever. Many people are also aware of the US Navy’s two dirigibles, the USS Akron and the USS Macon. Continue reading
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